Dictionary Definition
spendthrift adj : recklessly wasteful; "prodigal
in their expenditures" [syn: extravagant, prodigal, profligate] n : someone who
spends money prodigally [syn: spend-all,
spender, scattergood]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- someone who spends money improvidently or wastefully
Translations
someone who spends money wastefully
- Estonian: raharaiskaja
- Finnish: tuhlari
- Icelandic: eyðslukló
Adjective
spendthriftExtensive Definition
A spendthrift (also called profligate) is someone
who spends money prodigiously and who is extravagant and recklessly
wasteful. The origin of the word is someone who is able to spend
money acquired by the thrift of
predecessors or ancestors.
Historical examples of spendthrifts include
George IV,
Ludwig II, and Marie
Antoinette. The term is often applied sarcastically in the press as an
adjective to governments who are thought
to be wasting public money. William
Hogarth's A Rake's
Progress displays in graphical form the downwardly spiraling
fortunes of a wealthy but spendthrift son and heir who loses his money, and who
as a consequence is imprisoned in the Fleet Prison
and ultimately Bedlam.
Legal issues
see also Spendthrift
trust The modern legal remedy for spendthrifts is usually
bankruptcy. However,
during the 19th and 20th centuries, a few jurisdictions, such as
the U.S.
state of Oregon, experimented
with laws under which the
family of such a person could have him legally declared a
"spendthrift" by a court
of law. In turn, such persons were considered to lack the legal
capacity to enter into binding contracts. Even though such
laws made life harder for creditors (who now had the
burden of ensuring that any prospective debtor had not been
judicially declared a spendthrift), they were thought to be
justified by the public
policy of keeping a spendthrift's family from ending up in the
poorhouse or on
welfare.
Such laws have since been abolished in favor of
modern bankruptcy,
which is more favorable to creditors.
References
External links
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
big-time spender, dissipative, easy come, easy
go, extravagant,
improvident,
incontinent,
intemperate,
lavish, overgenerous, overlavish, overliberal, penny-wise and
pound-foolish, pound-foolish, prodigal, prodigal son,
profligate, profuse, spend-all, spender, squanderer, squandering, wasteful, waster, wastethrift, wastrel